Brazil and Spain Call for a Cease-Fire on Their Deportation War

Madrid's international airport, Barajas Following a tit-for-tat stand off between Brazilian and Spanish authorities regarding their nations tourists that saw airport agents sending back visitors Brazil and Spain have agreed to a "truce" on migration controls.

Brazilian Foreign minister Celso Amorim said that a truce had been reached with his Spanish counterpart Miguel Angel Moratinos and in the coming days less rigid controls will be applied to Brazilians arriving in Spain.

"Spaniard officials called me to find a solution. I interpret the call as a truce, an effort to diminish the number of Brazilians that are not admitted into Spain", said Amorim according to an interview published in the Brazilian daily O Globo.

Amorim described the phone call by  Moratinos as a "contention attitude" to avoid the situation evolving into a diplomatic incident. Almost 750 Brazilians have been deported so far from Spain and 3.000 in 2007, which motivated a formal complaint from the Brazilian government to the Spanish ambassador in Brasí­lia, Ricardo Peidró.

Brazilian president Lula da Silva, as happened previously with the United States migratory policy, ordered the principle of "reciprocity" to be instrumented and 27 Spaniards have been deported from Brazil in the last few days.

In the coming days a "tacit agreement" will be implemented "to avoid excesses, to avoid ill treatments and violation of human rights", said Amorim.

Last week 30 Brazilians, including scientists who had been invited to an academia congress were retained for over 24 hours in Madrid's Barajas airport before been deported.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Angra 1 Nuclear Plant

Nuclear Brazil Is Hiding Something. But What?

Secrecy shrouding Brazil’s nuclear capabilities, suspected technological advances and provocative statements made by Luiz ...

Brazil’s Green Princess and Presidential Candidate Marina Is No Tree-Hugging Populist

When Marina Silva was still Brazil’s environment minister, she took a trip to the ...

Brazil Cleans the Dictionary with a PC Brush

In Plato’s Dialogues, Cratylus considers that the names of things are naturally related to ...

Brazil: Threats and Altercation Inside Rousseff Administration’s Coalition

The vice president of Brazil, Michel Temer, admitted publicly “differences” inside the administration of ...

World Social Forum Back in Brazil After India Stint

The creation of a space for groups with common themes to debate ideas is ...

Who Will Be the Anti-Lula in Brazil?

So much for the holiday period.  Over the last month there has been plenty ...

Women in Brazil: So Protected Still So Abused

Women are granted by the Brazilian Constitution with an impressive quantity of ‘fundamental’ rights. ...

For Brazil, Doha’s Failed WTO Talks Are Still Very Much Alive

Brazilian ambassador Roberto Carvalho de Azevedo, the leading negotiator for Brazil in Geneva, stated ...

Brazil’s Satellite Pictures for Sale

One of the bilateral endeavors that Brazil and China are working together on is ...

Two Brazilian Garbage Men File Suit Against TV Anchor Who Offended Them

Prejudice has made headlines again in Brazil, and this time involving reputable Brazilian TV ...